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Boulder Solar Day

Cantata for Six Lives and Continuo: Remembering Dimitri Mihalas. Thomas J Bogdan UCAR/March 18, 2014. Boulder Solar Day. January 1959. August 1960. Boulder Solar Day. Charles Augustus Young 15.XII.1834-3.I.1908 B.A. Dartmouth 1853. Henry Norris Russell 25.X.1877-18.II.1957

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Boulder Solar Day

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  1. Cantata for Six Lives and Continuo: Remembering Dimitri Mihalas Thomas J Bogdan UCAR/March 18, 2014 BoulderSolarDay

  2. January 1959 August 1960 BoulderSolarDay

  3. Charles Augustus Young 15.XII.1834-3.I.1908 B.A. Dartmouth 1853 Henry Norris Russell 25.X.1877-18.II.1957 D.Sc. Princeton 1900 Lyman Spitzer Jr 26.VI.1914-31.III.1997 Ph.D. Princeton 1938 John Beverley Oke 23.III.1928-2.III.2004 Ph.D. Princeton 1953 Dimitri Manuel Mihalas 20.III.1939-21.XI.2013 Ph.D. Cal Tech 1964 BoulderSolarDay

  4. BoulderSolarDay

  5. Carry out the calculations of the radiative emission, scattering and absorption in the co-moving plasma frame and then solve the conservation equations (mass, momentum, energy, radiative transfer) in the fixed laboratory frame. BoulderSolarDay

  6. The co-moving plasma frame is generally not an inertial frame! BoulderSolarDay

  7. Conservation of Mass Conservation of Material Momentum Conservation of Material Internal Energy Grey Radiative Transfer Equation Moment Closure: Matter Conservation of Radiation Energy Conservation of Radiation Momentum Moment Closure: Radiation [?] NO BoulderSolarDay

  8. Wave Energy Density Wave Momentum Flux Conservation of Wave Energy BoulderSolarDay

  9. Trilogy in a Minor Key. Poems on Depression and Manic Depression (1991) [with Alex Sawyer & Lucia Wainwright] Cantata for Six Lives and Continuo (1992) If I Should Die Before I Wake (1993) The World is My Witness (1993) Dream Shadows (1994) Life Matters (1995) Coming Back From the Dead (2000) BoulderSolarDay

  10. Master’s Hand I try a fresh start recasting the equations into a form I have used before. For three more hours I wade through hard algebra. Finally I get a glimpse of what lies ahead: the formulae will simplify, most likely giving the result I need. In fifteen minutes it is done! I sit in a warm glow of deepened insight into how the world works. This is not a breakthrough. It’s more like slipping into place a piece of a perfectly articulated puzzle. Nevertheless by careful work I have been able to weed out unwanted complexity, to distinguish some richness of nature’s design. A design one instantly recognizes as coming from the hand of a master. Apart from the music on the stereo, it is almost silent; just a few crickets chirping outside. Baroque harpsichord concertos on the radio create the right mood. for precise work for cutting deep. I have been working on this problem for weeks, attacking it in pieces It is beginning to look as if my persistence may pay off. Yesterday I failed to get the result I need. But I got far enough to see I will get it, if at all, only by a fresh approach or a mathematical trick. Physics problems are like uncut diamonds; tap them ever so lightly at the right place and they cleave flawlessly to reveal a magnificent jewel. But hit them in the wrong place and you get nothing but useless shards. Middle of August late at night. I am in my study high in the hills over Boulder. My favorite place at a favorite time. I have been working for hours on the last part of a mathematical analysis needed for a research project in astrophysics. It has been a typical summer day: blinding sun blazing hot by noon cumulus building high overhead. Long buffalo grass so recently verdant sun-bleached to honey blonde. It rained hard from three to seven quenching the day’s heat. Now cool air scented with pine and the odor of wet grass pours in the window from blackness outside. BoulderSolarDay

  11. Master’s Hand I feel privileged to labor at such satisfying work. I end my working “day” more deeply in awe of what is out there: stars strewn through the Galaxy like dust; galaxies swarming by the billions through space. And pervading all of it: order. Subtle graceful powerful order. Set the best minds we have in the next thousand years the task of fathoming the inner structure of the cosmos, and they will barely scratch it surface; Barely glimpse this beautiful world which comes to us moment by moment fresh from the hand of God. It would take only minutes to check the result. But my discipline collapses in the face of victory, and I step outside for a break. God it is beautiful tonight! Very dark! Only feeble points of light in the valley. The summer triangle: Vega, Deneb, Altair, has already passed the meridian. Vaulting the dome of the sky is the pearly glow of summery Milky Way. Fireflies on black velvet I see the sky with astronomer’s eyes. Just over the southern horizon: Sagittarius rich with clouds of ancient stars which compose the nucleus of the Galaxy. These stars existed billions of years before the Sun was born. Higher up, young stars are forming in loose clusters from dust and gas. I also know about the complex orbital mechanics in play. Here I am on a dust-speck planet circling a pedestrian star – one of a hundred billion in the Galaxy – hurtling around the Galactic center at half a million miles an hour! The distances speeds time-scales are mind-boggling. It is hard to make the connection between my dry, abstract equations and vivid reality before me. Mozart’s Exultate Jubilate drifts out through the window. Perfect. With a shock I realize how late it is. If I stay much longer I will get to watch the dawn! I turn toward the door, a brilliant meteor streaks across the sky. Probably a Perseid, Perhaps a good omen as well. BoulderSolarDay

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